REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Life and human rights : Summer : no.
4., p. 4-48. - Tokyo; Seoul : The Society to Help Returnees to North Korea;
Citizens' Alliance to Help Political Prisoners in North Korea, 1997.

LANGUAGE: ENG

ABSTRACT: The other articles are:. 1. Help them now and save yourself, by
Min-Ju Kim. 2. The repatriation of Koreans from Japan to the North, by Yang-Su
Lee. 3. I met Korean repatriates and their Japanese wives in the North Korean
concentration camp, by Hyok Ahn. 4. Alas! I am responsibile for the tragedy,
by So-Pyong Kim. 5. Bound for the North in photos, by Seiryu Inoue. 6. The
society to help returnees to North Korea, Japan. 7. Citizen's Alliance to help
political prisoners in North Korea, Seoul, Korea.

Ogawa, Haruhisa : The fate of those who were repatriated from Japan to North Korea, 1996

BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial

The fate of those who were repatriated from Japan to North Korea / Ogawa,
Haruhisa

REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Life and human rights : Autumn: no.
1., p. 4-48. - Tokyo; Seoul : Society to Help Returnees to North Korea;
Citizens' Alliance to Help Political Prisoners in North Korea, 1996.

LANGUAGE: ENG

ABSTRACT: The other articles are:. 1. There are concentration camps in
North Korea, by Ahn Hyok and Ahn Myung-Chul. 2. A personal account of the
experience of a prisoner of conscience in the Democratic people's Republic of
Korea, by Ali Lameda.

REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Life and human rights : new year :
1997 : no. 2., 46 p.. - Seoul : The Society to Help Returnees to North Korea;
Citizens' Alliance to Help Political Prisoners in North Korea, 1997.

LANGUAGE: ENG

ABSTRACT: The other articles are:. 1. Concentration camps in the USSR :
their social impact, by Tesuro Kato. 2. People's enemy is produced by state
terrorism, by H. Ahn and Jaceques Rossi. 3. Laments from North Korea : voices
of japanese wives who went to the north.

Ogawa, Haruhisa : The world stands up for human rights in North Korea, 1997

BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial

The world stands up for human rights in North Korea / Ogawa, Haruhisa

REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Life and human rights : Winter : no.
6., p. 4-47. - Tokyo, Seoul : The Society to Help Returnees to North Korea;
Citizens' Alliance to Help Political prisoners in North Korea, 1997.

LANGUAGE: ENG

ABSTRACT: Other articles are:. 1. Is North Korea's withdrawal from the
international covenant on civil and political rights valid, by Bong-Do Chi. 2.
Children in North Korean concentration camps, by Chul-Hwan Kang. 3. Texts
related to the resolution on human rights in North Korea.

ABSTRACT: CONTENTS: PART ONE : Preparations for the trial.
PART TWO : First stage of the prosecution's case.
PART THREE : First presentations on the accused organizations.
PART FOUR : Presentations on the individual responsibility of defendants.
PART FIVE : The presentations of the French prosecution.
PART SIX : The presentations of the Soviet prosecution.
PART SEVEN : An overview of the defense case.
PART EIGHT : The defense of the accused organizations.
PART NINE : The closing arguments and the final statements of the defendants.
PART TEN : The judgment and history.

ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:.
Part 1: Precedents and Their Lessons:.
1. The Experience of Nuremberg, by Benjamin Ferencz.
2. The Contribution of the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda to
Reconciliation in Rwanda, by Alinikisa Mafivenga.
3. The Contribution of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former
Yugoslavia to Reconciliation in Bosnia and Herzegovina, by Sandra Coliver.
Part II: A Merger of International Criminal Law, Humanitarian Law, and Human
Rights Law:.
4. Toward International Human Rights Crimes: An Asian Perspective on Human
Rights and International Criminal Law, by Clarence J. Dias.
5. How the International Criminal Court Should Help Implement International
Humanitarian Law, by Patrick Zahnd.
6. Women's Issues in International Criminal Law: Recent Developments and the
Potential Contribution of the ICC, by Kelly Dawn Askin .
7. International Human Rights Law, International Humanitarian Law, and
International Criminal Law and Procedure: New Relationships, by Juan E.
Mendez.
Part III: International Public Policy and the ICC: Accountability, Deterrence,
and Redress :.
8: Amnesty and the International Criminal Court, by Naorni Roht-Amaza.
9: Domestic Amnesties and International Accountability, by Garth Meintjes.
10: The International Criminal Court and the Challenge of Deterrence, by
Gustavo Gallon . 11: The Penalty Provisions of the ICC Statute, by William A.
Schabas.
12: Reparations for Victims of International Crimes, by Dinah L. Shelton .
13: The Trust Fund of the ICC, by Thordis Ingadottir .
14: Are Reparations Appropriately Addressed in the ICC Statute?, by Fiona
McKay .
Part IV: Problems of Jurisdiction and Effectiveness :.
15: Complementarity and Its Discontents: States, Victims, and the
International Criminal Court, by Madeline Morris.
16: The United States and the ICC, by David Scheffer .
17: The ICC Statute: Protecting the Sovereign Rights of Non-Parties, by Roger
S. Clark .
18: High Crimes and Misconceptions: The ICC and Non-Party States, by Madeline
Morris .
Appendix: Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court ......

ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:.
PART I: THE LEGAL PRISM: 1. Shaping the Trials: The Politics of Trial Policy
1945-1949 2. Race-specific Crimes in Punishment and Re-educative Policy: The
Jewish Factor.
PART II : POST-WAR REPRESENTATIONS AND PERCEPTIONS:.
3. Plumbing the Depths of Nazi Criminality: The Limits of Legal Imagination.
4. Charting the Breadth of Nazi Criminality: The Failure of the Trial Medium.
PART III: THE TRIALS AND POSTERITY: 5. A Nuremberg Historiography of the
Holocaust?.
Conclusions Appendix A: Charter of the International Military Tribunal,
Article 6 Appendix B: The Defendants and Organizations before the IMT Appendix
C: The Subsequent Nuremberg Proceedings Bibliography